VOL. 2. DALLAS, OREGON, SATURDAY. AUGUST 26, 1871. m 25 3ht )rf(j0u Ucyublitan la Issued Every Saturday Morning, at Dallas, Polk County, Oregon. BY R. II..TYSOX. OFFICE Mill street, opposite the Court lluuee. SUBSCRIPTION SATES. IVOLE COPrES One Year. $2 00. Six Sf.Mith. $1 .2.i Throe Months, $1 00 For Clubs of :en tt more t2 per annum. $berijitin timet be paid Htrictly in advance ADVERTISING R,ATES. One square (10 lines or less), first insert'n, f 3 00 3icu subsequent insertion. 1 00 A Ubjrtl deduction will be made to quar terly and yearly advertisers. Professional cards will be inserted at $12 00 per imnuin. Trinsiont advertisements must be paid for n alvance to in?nre publication. All other advertising bills must bo paid quarterly. L jal tenders taken at their current value. Bl inks and Job Work of every description furnished at low rates on short notice. A Splendid Chance. We will sen ! the Dallas Retcm-ioa and Dem rest's Monthly, which is itself $3 for one year, to any person who pays us $1 Dkmorest's Monthly stands unrivalled as a Family Magazine. Its choice Literature, its superior Mueie, its large amount of valuable in form at on on miscellaneous subjects, its practical and reliable information in regard to the fashions, and artistic illustrations, give it a Just claim to its well-earned title, The Model Jlfagaziue of America." The sales f kiJ gloves increase each year .about five jer cent. It would be quite impossible to fiu'l kid enough to supply the dummd for :lovo.s, o re ccsitse is hid to sheep skin, and it is asserted by several of our small-we;ir filks that nut ten per oenf.-.f theirlove. rfuld for kid are the 'estimate article The pelfs of sucking 1 oobs and colts art the principal material u-ed. II a t 1iins arc .never used for gloves ; tlcy ,yre too small, and cannot bo dressed r .ft and diir tb.e Hit skins are tanned fur covering jewelry boxes. A renume jcid .j;l've is thin, fine grained, deMcate and suff, yet very strum. Sheep k'u gloves are coarse-grained, thick and stoat, .od if soivcd to a thinness to re pre-eiit k;d, it i flimsy and r fton. J';nU r lie he i'l quarters nf the kid and colt kin l ive. The kid kii are Co'hcfed in ail pilf.s nf the World while the coir kins c ine from Tartary, where th; fi-isii of sucking colts is a staph; article of food. The tauninr. dressing and cutting of the gloves are done io Paris, arid thence sent out into the cointty to be sewed The rreat bulk of the Pans glows hive alway been seAed in the district f Alsace aud Lorr.jine, and now that Germany Ins acquired that territory, Paris, to retain her glove trade, will be compelled to very generally adopt the sewing machine. Uy an ingenious application skilled operators ca i afford to sew gloves thirty percent, cheaper with machines than by hand The .-hoop skin glove--eoiue principally from Naples and Vi enna. 'This class of gloves is very largely worn as a preference by many, as teing about one third the pric of the kid article; the wearer can afford f.vifh better economy to wear a new pair of sheep skin gloves every day, and thus pre-ent a, cleaner unsoilcd glove, than in purchasing kid continually, aud replacing them uith soiled. For lad its wear, kid gloves are made in ten sizes, from five and tiree eights t eight inches, which also is an index of their numbers. This is the size of fthe hand they are to fit, measuring .around the knuckle joints. Gloves are put up io packages of a dozen, each of a. diOeivnt color. Manufacturers are ,often at a great disadvantage in wait ing for some one color to complete an invoice to be sent off. One of our Bos ton jobbers had a lot of fourteen thou sand dozen making up in Paris when the war broke out, that had been wait ing shipment for weeks, delayed by the .non-receipt of a peculiar shade of green, ..one pair for each dozen. They were finally shipped with a different color ported to make up the count. This seemingly small marter of substituting one color, Dot specially ordered, ruined the lot, and the got ds were sold as un marketable. The sizes of gloves Bold in the United States are smaller than they were twenty years ago . and the call is jfitill for enuggt r Gti on smaller bauds. The smallest gloves made are sold in the American market, and now the jSizes seven and three quarters and ,igbt are put up abroad in the assort' vtiAjamx iiients for this market. For the first time, sizes five and a quarter up to six are to be put up expressly for a Boston house. The colors now in use are brighter than formerly, as opera shades are very generally worn on the streets. Gloves from abroad are ordered eight mouths ahead, and in the lo's to arrive for the coming fall or winter trade are four and five button gloves, seemingly an exaggeration of the present popular gauntlet style. The very general u-e of kid gloves has altuo-t driven lisle thread goods out of the market. These are German manufacture, as also are our white cotton military glove-;. It l the cheap labor that keeps this lino of manufacture abroad. A very good kid glove is ui ide in Philadelphia, and at G'oversville, New York ; some of our retail small dealers have them in ladies sizes. 'I hey are not so thiu and sott as the French article, but are really more serviceable; Ltid if the trade would generally throw them into the market with a legitimate American brand, Yankee kids would be very generally accepted us a desirable arti cle. Hog ton Commercial ll'ilhtin. SUNKEN IRONCLADS. Curious Things Ween Ty Divers at the llotiom of the sea. The Charleston New, in giving an account of the work of wreckers in Charleston hat bor, says that the iron clad Housa'onic lies in thirty six tee of water, just over the bar, sixteen miles from the city. She rests on a hard shell bottom, and lies northwest and southeast, upright on her keel. The water out there is beautituliy ch ar, aud the divers prosecute their work with much less difficulty than at the Wee hawken. Her deck masts an I tigging have all been eaten a way t.y the wtin-. and little eUe is left of her but the huge, black hull Her propeller, shaft , chains and anchors, and a large porti m of' her machinery have been hoisted out by the machine, and at.-o two ot the smaller guns composing her anna nent. The rest of them ere taken up fy the Government several years ago The Government lus a buoy pi iotf l aoout I00 yards eastsouth at of tlii wreck, which enables the-wreckers to uuess pretty closely as to h r whtrea bouts. To render the matter a cer tainty, however, Captain ,Sanv when fie leaves her to com-; up t- the city, m irks her position with a buoy fis cu ed to the center of the hull. About twenty feet south of tho wreck of the doomed ship lies the hull of her des troyer, the Confederate torpeda-boaf . She has been visited y ihe Captain, who reports her to be lyi'g bottom up ward, and seemingly in good preer-'a tion. There are no holes in her hull, and the wings of her diminutive propeller, now uppermost, seem to be in gund running order She did her work efl'ee fu illy. In the hull on thf p ut, ju ti ter of the huge ship is a jigged hie luge enough to drive a carriage and pan through. The heavy oaken ribs aud thick plants are blown in with tremen dous power, and the Housafonic must have gone down with but little pieptr afion Her diminutive but dangerous' foe met with a similar fate, and the two now rest in silence, side by aide, at the bottom of the fea. Under the waters the diver seecuri ous things and make curious acquaint ances. Near the surface of ihe wafer, on his way down, the diver sees sharks of enormous dimensions, which wein afraid of the curious minsters thus intruding on their domain. The sharks are never seen at the bottom tiny keep their distance but the smab fry at the bottom are much more soeiahle. These, swim arcund the diver in the most indifferent manner, and whli a curiosity truly fetninitie, insert their noses in every orifice in his submarine armor. Their particular amusement is to pry into the glass eyes, aud at times they are as troublesome as the mosqui toes are to us land-lubbers. All vari eties, and immense numbers of these , small fish feed around on the shells, and their curiosity renders them easy victims to the insinuations of hook and bait. At night the phosphorescent sparks io the clear blue water out at the Housatonic, light up the depths in a wonderful manner, and the diver en joys the illumination, though he has not much time for enjoying the beauties ot nature, lie stays down si hours or less, as his work renders it necessary. In rummaging about the ship, the Capt. discovered several bottles of Rhine wine and ale. He also brought up a globular brass lamp and several me -a I mountings from officers' swords. The C-ptain has also iu his possession a massive jawbone. It is evidently the lower maxillary of a man, but its size and the strength of teeth are wonderful. a-'jaxfeem juumiMBE un: i.i'i.iji-:n:iJ of von;N. ! lMtUTTV Life becomes mote harmonious, and beats with a k. euer pulse of enjoyment, iu the presence ( pretty w nen. After all, a charming linie figure, a piqu nt lifle face, is the best remedy for half the ills of existence, its worries, its vex ations, its du ness, its disappointments And even iu the larger and puore placid types of benny ot a la ly Dumbelle, if there is a tiu.'e of stupidity, t here is. at any rate, an atmosphere of repose, a Venial influence. m-Mi'diug ' mr social converse and habits into gentler shapes It is amusing to see how the pretti ness of woman tells on her dr. s, how the order and propriety of her dress tells on the home. The pursuit of beauty, the habit of prettiness, gives an ileal dignity fo the vcryaira gemntof her bonnet strings. In ever, move merit, in the very sweep of her ample folds, iu the of her languor, iu the gay start of her excitement, one f-els the softening, harmonizing influence o fo r last look iu the glass. She may be gay or soiruwfu1, ijmet or energetic, but she must be prctiy. IJeauty exercise an iu erceptible compulsion over her whole hfe into graoful and harmonious f irms. Her dres rUes out of the mere clothing of man into the regions of a science, of poetry, of art. A thousand consideration of tate, of color, con trasts, correspondencies, delicate ad justm-nts of light and shade, dictate the choice of a shawl or the tinge of a glove. And as the prettiest tells on dres, it tells on the home. Flowers, pictures, the gay notes of a sonata, the cosiest ol enueiies, gorgeous hues of Indian tapes try. glass work of Murauo, a hundred xquisite somethings and nothings, are this uutur.it setting ot pretty women l"U ' art of the boudoir tell- On all but the chaos of the husband's study. Around that la-t refuge of barbarism II oats an atmosphere of taste an 1 refine nieot in which the pretty wife lives and move and has her being. Aud. from this tone of the home grows the tone ol society, the social laws of good humor, of propriety, of self restr nut. of consid eritiou for others, of gentleness, ot vivacity. The very hu-h of the roi'gh tones that have thundered over Pel ptnie sus as Perie es bn Is over Ap.t eia. the little turnings and delicacies of phrase, the joyous serfdoms and idle lo ss of the manliest and mo-t energetic f men, e! s of the triumph of pretty women Kxi han'ifi. Xi-w York l ictui in It uan. A reporter of the New York Timet his been in-peeting the tenement houses of that city, and gives a sicken ing picture of the manner in which human beings are packed together in tho-e nur-erie of pest deuce and crime. The tenement house and cellar popula ti"n exceed hlf a midtou. Ir. the 1th wild, one small tot, 2PJ by Kit) feet, are twenty tenement houses. III fam ilies. GiO persons, five stables, a soap arid Caudle factory, and a tan y'd. 'Phis i-- a larger iiu nber of hutnyn beings th i't can be fou d on any block on upper Pifih or Madison Avenue', where some of the tenement owners reside. In the sau'e ward, on one block, sixty otd and rickety buildings, occu pied by 118 families, of which two arc Welsh, eight Portugese, nineteen Foo lish, ten American, twelve Freu'jh, thir y nine ' colored, one hundred and eighty six Italian, one hundred and thirty nine Polish, two hundred and eighteen German, ar.d eight hundred and forty -eight Irish In oue blocds of buiidings, owned or controlled by the situo parties, tiro over JJ.0J0 persons. Several tenumcr.ts contain over 1 000 These are huddled together in filthy, dark, uuventilated rooms, for wh cn tiny pay extortionate prices, and suffer untold miseries in body and mind. A Poetic Thought. The crew ofa man of-war once saw a comet, and were somewhat alarmed and surprised at its appearance. The hands met and ap pointed, a committee to wait on the commander and ask his opinion of it. They approached him and said : 'We want to ask your opinion, your Honor." " Well my boys what is it about ?" 4 We want to inquire about that thing up there." "Now, before I answer you first let mo know what you think it is." Well your honor, wo have talked it ovc, and wo think it is a star sprung a leak A well known English Lord is said to have given the following instructions to his steward : Wre nre coming down, a large party,1 in a day or two, to eat atrawberries and cream We want plenty of tho latter, so don't let any of the cows bo milked meanwhile." 1AI1Y HOY. In a certain small town ou the Missis tdppi lived a man who made horse-trading a business. He bought up horses for a city market, an 1 wUs considered pret ty good on a trade. Oue day a long lean, queer, green looking specimen of the Western coun try arrived at the dock with a boat load of horses. Ho inquired for the horse jockey. Daddy sent me down wrh some horses," he said in a half idiotic toue. "Who's he?" Daddy.", "What do you want for your horses? Daddy said yo-i could set yure price." was the response " Let me godotvn and look at your horses," taid IJiown, aud accordingly they were soon at the boat. lirown examined the horses, and named the price he would give for this oue aud that, and the country bumkin made no otjectiou, although some of the offer. were not more than one-half the real price of the animals. One of the fejstandets y;et.tly suggested to the countryman that he was being cheated, bu ho returned : 44 DadJy said IJrown would set the price himself," and so lirowu had it all his own way. At last they came to another animal which did not lvKk much superior to i be rest. ' I must have more for tha? anermel," s;d the fellow. "Daddy says he can run kuiio." Hun !" s.iid lirown, ''that nag can't run worth a cent." " Daddy said so, and daddy knows." l Why, I've got one up to the. stable that would teuit it all to hodow." ' Guess not,' aid tti fcliow. 44 Let's try 'cm I'll bet the whole boat luid of horses on im. ill own smiled. 4 I'll be five thousand dollars against your boat load," said lirowu winking to the crowd, 4 at d these men electing two Shad hold stakes," 4 Brown five thousand was intrus ted to one, and the other went ou board the horse boat. One i f tho crowd started to remon strate with the poor idiotic fellow, but lie only responded : "Golly ! dad fold me he could run some, and dadv'y ought to lose 'cm if he was sich a t.itnal fool as to tell me that when he couldn't." Brown's sleek racer was brought down, and lirown mounted him. The countryman lead o it his auiuitl and climb 'd on his back, lo . king as uncouth and awkward as the horse he proposed to ride. The wor l w t-8 given an 1 they started, midst the laughter of the croud. At first Brown was ahe:;d, and it looked as though the poor fellow was to be bidly beaten, when suddenly his ho,se plung ed forward. and the horse jockey Wa; left far behind. Such going- had not been seen iu those pans for a long time, anl poor lirowu was cresi fallen, s the cheers of the bystanders fell on his ears. 4- I'll take the spondulix," said the countryman, riding up. 4' Daddy was right The aneunul can git round a little" Drown tried to say it was all a joke, hut the fcliow would have his money I gues I won't trade today," he said, as he put it in his old, rough, leather pocket book. "I'll go back to daddy." I In vain Drown tried to induce him to trade, but he pushed off his boat, reso lutely saying, "I'd better go back aud tell daddy !" Drown was completely "sold," for he knew at once that the green country man was a leelle shrewder than the peo ple imagined him, and had ju-t come there purposely to win his money from him i Next time ho did not ridicule a horse that "daddy" said 44 could run some." I Who has so succeeded in imitating Shakspeare as to remind us of him by even so' much as the gait of a single verse? Those magnificent crystaliza tions of feeling and phrase basaltic masses, molten and interfused by the primal fires of passion, are not to be reproduced by the slow experiments of the laboratory striving to parody crea tion with artifice. Lowell It is said by the Orieotal that when alms fall from the hand of the giver into those of tho receiver they say these five things : "I Bin small, but thou hast made me great. My value was little, but thou bust multiplied it I was thy enemybut thou hast made me thy friend. I was transient, but thou hast made mo permanent. Thou wast ruy keeper, but now I am thioe." PROFESSIONAL CARDS, dC. i PORTLAND -- - - - OREGON. General News Agent I'or Oregon aud Adjacent Terrritorle. AL.o SPECIAL COLLECTOR of all kfodf f CLAIMS. AGENT fur the Dallas Republican J Oil A' J, lAI,V, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, IVolarv Fublic, &c, ui:na vista. 4I-tf J. C. GRUBBS, M. D.i physician and suiu;t:o.v, Offers his Services to tbe Citizens of Dallas ni Vicinity. OFFICE at NICHOLS' Drug Store. 34-tf V. D. JliPI'RIUS, M. D.t Physician ami Surgeon, lula, Oregon. Ff.ecial attention given to Obstetrics and Die&ei of Women. ltf Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law, ALI.M, OUI2CON, Win practice in all tbe Cwirts of Record and Inferior Courts of this State. OFFICE la WatkinJs Jk, Co's Brick, up stairs. 1 I C. SUM, I VAX, Attorney & Counsellor-At-Law, Dallas, Oregon, Will practice in a!l tbe Courts of tbe State. 1 .1. I.. COI,M:VS, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law. Dalla. Oregon, 5fecil attention cif n to Collections and to matter pcrtfliniti to Ktai Eat ale. 1 Real folate-AffcufM and Itsal Estate Auctioneers, No- KM). FRONT KTR I3I2T, PORTLAND ..... OKIXiON. ii. p. uiiiYi:it, EioiiMp, Wagon anil Sign rainier, DalLi. Polk County, Oregon. 4-4m l'nItru ood, Baxter & Co, Commercial street, Salem, Oregon, MANUFACTURE ALL KINDS OF WAG ONS after the roojt approved tjles and tbe best of workmanship, on fhrt notice, and AT PORTLAND PRICES! 12-3m WAGON AND 6A.1RIAGE SHOP, Main Htreet, Dai. Second door north of the Drug Store. The undcrsiicned winh.es to inform the l'uhlie that ho is prepared t do an? kind of work in his line on the shortest notice, and in the best niyle. Thankful to-hi old customer and friends for former pfttrunagc, he respectfully snHcits a continuance of the same. .tj-tf S. T. UARRISOX. Committee on Kail roads Hare decide ! that as soon as tho Oregon Central Hail road (Vet Side) is completed into Polk County, they will issue orders to all con tmctora and woikmen on tbe lino to purchase all ihiir Groceries and Provisions, Clothing. Boots and Shoes, Ladies Drea Goods, . Hardware, Tinware, Or anything they may happen to wnnt of M. M. Ellis, at Laclede, formerly known as duff's Stre. Meanwhile, nil fanners,' or anyone else, will find it to their interest to call mid make their selections. All are aware that I am sell ing g-oda cheaper than anybody in Polk Co. I buy more Produce than any firo stores in the Comity. So bring along your Butter if it is soft, and if it is solid, all tbe better. Yours truly, M. M. ELLIS. 20-3m U DOOR AND MAIN STREET, DALLAS. 1 have constantly on hand and for Sale WINDOW SASII, blazed and IJnglazcd. BOORS OF ALL SIZES. WINDOW AND DOOR FRAMES, All of the Best Material and Manufacture. JUlf JAMES M. CAMPBELL. PROFESSIONAL CARDS, dC. D AX LAS HOTEIj, CORXUtt MAIN AND COURT 8TS. Dallas, Folk County, Oregon. Tbe undersigned, having RE-FITTED the above HOTEL, now informs the Public that be is prepared to Accommodate K wb may favor biui with a call, in s good style as caa be found In iwiy Ilotelin ib Couptry. Give me a call, aud you shall not leave disappointed. 12-tf W. F. KENNEDY, Proprietor. IVKW WAGOiV AND CAB RIAE FACTORY. RICHARDSON & CO. Inform the Publij that they are now ready to do all kinds of work in tbeir line. CARRIAGES. WAGONS, Ac. Built or Re paired with Neatness and Dispatch. WAOONS constantly mi hand for Sale. ULACKSMITliiNU dune by an experteaced Workman. One door south of Livery Stahle Dallas, Ogn, 8-tf Saddlery, Haincssi S. C. SI1LGS, Main at. (opposite the Cour JJoose), Dallat MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN Harness, Saddles, Bridles, Whips. Collars, Check Lines, etc., etc., of all kinds, which he if prepared to tell at tbe lowest living rates. 2&REPAIRING done on short notice. $73 E V C RV WE E K! BADE EASY, LADY AGENTS. We want Smart and Energetie Agents to introduce our popular aud atly ceJeW44 invention, io every Villugr, Toicm and Ctr the World. Lull spendable lo every Household; They are bijjhlv approved of, endorsed and adopted by -iaiAct, f'hyt. .tn und XKciftet, and are now a GREAT FAVORITE with t'ucni. j IlTcry Family will Turchase One or more of them. Something that their merit are apparent at a LA N CC DRUGGISTS, MILLINERS. DRESS MA SEB8 and all who keep FANCY STORES, will find our exccllei t article SELL VEliY RAPID. L Y, gives perfect satisfaction and netting SM ALL FORTUNES to all Dealers and Agents. COUNTY Kir.HTS FREE to all who desire engaging in an Honorable. lltpectable d PrrJioUe ltuinu, at tbe same time doing good to their coopamons in life. Sample $2 00, fent free by mail on receipt of price. SEND FOU WHOLESALE CIRCU LAR. ADDRESS, VICTORIA MANUFACTURING COMPT., IT, PARK PLACE, New York. 111 ii ii J. II. KINC AID has opened a New Photographic Gallery Id Dallas, where he will be pleased to wait on Customers in his line of Business at all hours of the day. Children's Pictures Taken without grumbling, at tbe tame price at Adult. Satisfaction guaranteed. Price to suit the times. Rooms at Lafolletfs Old Stand, Main Street, Dallas, Polk County, Oregon, April 27th, 1871 8-tj . S. SILVER, Wo. 13G, First Street, PORTLAND, - - - - OREGON, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in DRY GOODS,' - CLOTHING,'' LADIES' DRESS GOODS, BOOTS AND SHOES, HATS Sf CAPS, GROCFRESd' PROVISIONS, Highest Cash Price paid for all iindfl of Oovmtry JPiodnee. 16-4 m Hag Carpet Weaving j . , 4 LL PERSONS HAVING MATERIAL V for RK Carpets, and wishing them Woven, can be accommodated by calling on the undersigned. Orders left at the Store of R. Howe Bros, will Ixs promptly attended to. 16 3m WM. SAl LSBERRY. FURNITURE ! Bureaus, JLoiiiigcs, Table, Bedsteads. A Variety of CHAIRS for Parlor aud Kitchen use, RAW-BIDS B0TT0I3 CHAIK3 Of my own make. -., Shop near Waytnire's mill I INVITE TT1E PUBLIC TO EX A MIND my stock. I shall be pleased to show yea my goods, and better pleased when yon bay. NEW WORK pet up to Order, and RE PAIRING done at the lowest cash price. 4 tf WX C. 711X2, VUm.